Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1943 — Page 20

NOUNG BAPTISTS | WILL CONVENE,

$ The $norrow through Sunday in the

¥ Because of wartime conditions, ¥ e central district convention and

fisual state meeting which was to $ave been held here. : 4500 young people are expected to.

i Banquet

dngs from the Cross,” sung: by the Southport choral group. The. Rev. |. H. Lindstrom will direct the Presentation and also the song Service tomorrow evening.

® Other convention features are #moving pictures of camp life, games Bnd recreation directed by the Rev. Floyd Smith. A sunrise service will

Bible classes, morning worship and gommunion, # Dr. L. C. Trent, host pastor, will Meliver goMcers will be elected, an orator-

SAnn O'Brien, Miss Alice Waggoner and Miss Josephine Ward.

/ ‘Don Winslow of the Const Guard'~—News

Central District Session to .Open Tomorrow: in fi Woodruff Church.

Central district Baptist oung People’s union will meet to-

Woodruff Place Baptist church.

five additional ones in various Parts of Indiana will replace the

Bttend the district meetings,

! An outstanding event will be the Saturday evening at oodruff Place church followed by oratorio, “The Seven Last Say-

Hold Sunrise Service

ppen the day Sunday followed by

the convention sermon. cal contest conducted for high $chool students, and Bible conferRaces held, Saturday morning. . The Rev. W. O. Breedlove will fhpeak at the popular meeting on Bunday at 2 p. m. to close the conWention. Miss Florence Smith of Indianapolis is chairman of gen#ral arrangements and Albert Dell ls central district chairman. Others isting Miss Smith are Miss Alice

AIR-CONDITIONED

NOW—REGULAR PRICES

GARY COOPER

in THE PEIDE OF || THE YANKEES. COL. FRANK € APRA'S

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Te Plus! 2nd Hit!

“The “Desert Fox” Rommel’s Final Mistake!

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Color Cartoon-=News

Kick up your heels and. howl! Their funniest!

—First Indianapolis Show Range Busters, ‘‘Cowbo mr Sados™ Rich hard yie Ruth Ford “TRUCK BU! RS’

A total of}?

‘An ' American soldier and an Indian girl shuffle and slide at an enlisted men’s club dance at a U. 5. air depot somewhere in India.

TROPIC DISEASE STUDIED AT I.

Dr. William H. Headlee Is Appointed to Direct

Course.

. Dr. William H. Headlee, staff member and specialist in parasitology, today was named to direct the study of tropical diseases at the Indiana university medical center. Dr. W. D. Gatch, dean of the I. U. medical school, said that the study of such diseases is not new at the center, but is being emphasized because of wartime conditions. He said that intensified study will prepare future army and navy doctors for duty in tropical regions

ment of rare diseases, now un-

‘|known in this country, which may

be carried back by soldiers from far-flung regions. Took Intensive Courses Action at the center follows the recommendation of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The association arranged intensive courses for those chosen to teach the courses at various medical schools and Dr. Headlee spent two

‘| years at the army medical school in

Washington. Dr. Headlee is a native of Shelby

-{ county and graduated from Earl-

ham college. He taught at Purdue university, studied’ diseases of tropical Egypt, was a Rockefeller Foundation fellow at Tulane university institute of tropical medicine and spent a year as biologist and‘ parasitologist in Venezuela.

OKAY FIRST-CLASS RATE WASHINGTON, June 10 (U. P.). —The house yesterday unanimously passed and sent to the senate a bill continuing the present three-cent Yate on first class mail.

NOW i SHOWING

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IRIN

n Ladd Tears into the Sons of Nippon!

AZ [

with WILLIAM BENDIX. the Wake Ista” To ms

“HIGH EXPLOSIVE’

J ¢ y with Jean Parhered hiester Morris

“TOMORROW

Something Doing Every Minute in \i» This Sey. Aftay of Top Talent!

of

Bo RK: a

"8 Song and a. Za Swing and Romance

LUPE VELEZ

"MICHAEL DUANE

thr MONDAY

Ls af, A7 ce Nay,

TIM HERBERT

Broadway's New Sensation 4 Juggling Jewels

“Thrills and Beauty” 3 Caprino Sisters an Loveliest Harmonists” MARILYN

CLEVE & KELLER

“Oh, Yeah”

Three Gascas “Big Top's Greatest Novelly”

Don Pancho & Co.

! “Derringdo On The Wire” Talent Contest Fri. 7 p.m.

Your Favorite Quiz Show

“Pick a Winner”

Broadcast Over WIBC Stage. Th a Night on. Nig 115 to 9:45 Fun

snd Cash Prizes LATE DEFENSE WORKERS® SHOW SAT, NIGHT (1:40.

and prepare doctors for the treat- |

= LEWIS SPLITS.

MINE OWNERS

Reaches Agreement With ~ Pennsy Group, May Get $1 .50 Raise.

By FRED W. PERKINS Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, June 10.—Question for today: Whether peace in the coal ‘mines has been promoted or delayed by the wedge John L. Lewis has driven into the solid front of operators, who for three months have opposed the United Mine Workers demands for wage increases in excess of those permitted by government stabilization policies. The answer should be indicated today by the national war labor board in a public hearing, announced to guide it toward a “final disposition” of the long controversy which has brought two nation-wide coal strikes and contains the threat of a third. The Lewis wedge took shape in sudden announcement late yesterday by Charles O'Neill, who heretofore has been the chief .spokesman for all northern operators, that the central Pennsylvania group he directly represents had withdrawn from the Appalachian conference and was about to make its own separate agreement with the United Mine Workers.

Camouflage Is Needed He would not disclose details, but a concensus of informed guesses hit on $1.50 a day as the probable raise the O’Neill group had offered the union. This is about midway between the $2 Mr. Lewis originally demanded on March 10 and the opproximate $1.03 that war labor poard statements have indicated it might approve. Any pay for the miners must be well camouflaged under allowance for “inequities,” including portal-to-portal pay, or a host of other unions, previously denied what they demanded, will move in on the war labor board and its part of the economic stabilization program will be placed under extreme pressure. | Mr. O'Neills punouncement came at the end’ of “a -day in which he had been in frequent personal powwows with the:mine worker leader. while the rest ‘of the operators wondered what was going on. He made his statement almost at the exact moment that house and senate conferees were reaching an agreement on the Connally-Smith anti-strike bill. Mr. Lewis’ actions during the day had indicated he was concerned about this legislation, which may become ‘the first federal unionregulatory law in many years.

Bill Strengthens WLB

He was believed also to be concerned about today’s proceedings of the war labor board, an agency that ‘he has denounced and ignored. If the Connally-Smith’ bill | becomes law, the board will have power to compel attendance of labor leaders as well as of management spokesmen concerned in cases before it. ‘That measure also contains stiff penalties for labor leaders promotjing strikes in war industries under government ‘control, as coal mines now are. The central Pennsylvania district accounts for about 10° per cent of the nation’s coal tonnage, and bulks largely in the northern Appalachian region, which includes also western Pennsylvania, northern West Virginia and Ohio. Despite the district withdrawal,

in submission of the dispute for arbitration by NWLB, were made by former Senator Edward R. Burke, spokesman for the southern operators; R. L. Ireland Jr., of Cleveland, succeeding Mr. O'Neill as northern spokesman; and Harry M. Moses, who heads the important “captive” coal operations of U. S. Steel Corp., including some in central Pennsylvania, Wedge Used Before

The wedge tactics of Mr. Lewis have been used before in past controversies with coal operators, but this year there is a new factor— government control of the industry as well as wages, the former being exercised by Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes, the latter by the war labor board, all under the general direction of President Roosevelt and his stabilization aides, James F. Byrnes and Fred M. Vinson. The central Pennsylvania withdrawal was the first split of that kind that has occurred among

{northern coal operators since the

present bargaining machinery was set up 10 years ago. Any agreement made by the central Pennsylvania group must be submitted for approval of the war labor board. This was stated by Mr. O'Neill directly, and by Mr. Lewis indirectly, though he would not mention the board specifically. Because of the complicated economics and competitive conditions of the coal industry, it is thought cer- | tain that the board will be forced to consider the central Pennsylvania agreement’s effect on the remainder of the industry. Any considerable increase in production costs resulting from higher compensation to workers will have to go, also, through the office of price administration, which has jurisdiction over coal prices.

Ih Be ( VIZ IPR! alin,

declarations of intention to con-|. tinue without change, particularly|

tem | Am SHll

Thinking of You'

BATTLE CREEK, Mich., June 10 (U..-P.)~~A brief note, found off the California coast and believed to have been written by her missing son, was delivered to Mrs. H PF. Glass here today. “Mom, I am still thinking of you,” was all the brief message said. ‘It was signed: Lawrence Glass, Electric ave., Battle Creek. Glass was reported lost on the submarine Shark in March, 1942. The note was found in a bottle in San Francisco Bay by Almer A. Jennings, a soldier, and was forwarded to Mrs. Glass. The message was written on a small piece of paper apparently torn from a pad. The paper was stained and the note looked as though it had been scribbled hurriedly, Mrs, Glass said: Mrs. Glass said. \

FSA MAY FOLD 11 FARM C0-0PS

But Officials Privately Say Experiments Are Ready

- To Produce.

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Special Writer

WASHINGTON, June 10.— Farm security administration officials are ready to fold their 11 co-operative farm projects without a fight, it has developed through house committee hearings. Although some said privately that these Tugwellian experiments are now ready to produce and possibly to pay off something for the first time, only Lawrence Hewes, San Francisco regional director, had a good word for such farming as a witness before the committee. He told the committeemen that he thought that the Casa Grande farms in Arizona are “fine farm properties.” There are 4000 acres of tillable land there and 1000 acres for grazing. Casa Grande is operated by a co-operative corporation.

Layouts Cost $1,250,000

But Chairman Harold D. Cooley (D. N. C.) and Rep. John W. Flannagan (D. Va.) produced figures to show that this layout cost Uncle Sam aroufid $1,250,000, including 3 per cent interest since 1936. It has had as many as 59 families, but only 40 remain now. “So_ that form of rehabilitation has cost about $30,000 per family, which is mighty high,” Mr. Flannagan concluded.

explained diab thi’ wos property THiS’ stand ‘wa. veflscted ‘alis DY | pevaoh Roles tn

inherited from the regime of Dr. Rexford Guy Tugwell. He refused to defend any of the co-operative farms, and pointed out that he testified weeks ago that he was for liquidating them. .

LAST DAY! “REAP THE WILD WIND’

Yeoriat discussion. exactly $400.”

‘North Carding ignitor age food (for w#r production and perhaps give the government a real he thought the Casa Grandereturn on its investment, “It paid off for the first time last year,” Mr. Cooley said in an in-

Howard Gordon, FSA regional director from Raleigh, N. C, although, . in previous ' conversation with newspapermen, he had said that the 5000-acre, $1,000,000 Scup-

vested, Mr this be: done pronto. $

Here's the raw, true story of the old West's most shocking adventure! Mob violence whipped to white heat by the mocking laughter of a woman.

Dana Andrews - Mary Beth Hughes Anthony Quine William Eythe - Nonry Morgan - Jane Darwell

Directed by WILLIAM A. WELLMAN Produced and Written for the Screen by LAMAR TROTTI

“THEY CARETD BON OF Sanders: ‘. Anns § en;

'__Plus— “NIGHT PLANE FROM CHUNGKING”

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FSA Administrator C. B. Baldwin

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WALT DISNEY'S ou REVUE

GEORGE MURPHY THOMAS MITCHELL LLOYD NOLAN

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